To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

Dianetic converts scoff at skeptics
English critic eulogizes t. s. eliot
.... by ALICE KATEM
After speaking about modern ritish poets for more than an hour yesterday, Geoffrey Moore, English writer and editor, told his audience. “Now if anyone asks me when the good people are going to take over England I’ll get so furious and frantic that I'll hire a hall like L. Ron Hubbard.”
Professor Moore, who is a graduate of London and Cambridge universities and the Sorbonne, ran the gamut of present-day poets from T. S. Eliot through John Masefield and the Georgians, to the Pylon poets including W. H. luden, Stephen Spender, and Louis MacNeice of the BBC, in his dis-
cussion of the New Romantic movement.
NEW ROMANTICS
“If anything comes of the work from this period, I think it will be from this group of New Romantics including Dylon Thomas, of the voice of ‘a sea of treacle moving to the beat of a gong;’ George Barker, W. S. Graham, who writes very fine and very incomprehensible lyrics, and Cecil Day-Lewis, next in line for the Poet Laureateship,” he said.
PUBLIC MUST LEARN Professor Moore explained why to many people think 20th century poetry is obscure. He said that the modern poet no longer tries to ad-
dress his audience orally but rather visibly in what he terms as "mind-music.”
He said that the public must learn to accept a new kind of ca-dence and live with the poetry in order to understand it, as they must with the music of Schoenberg, Hindemith, and Bloch.
Reading many poems, both comprehensible and incomprehensible, Professor Moore traced the significant influences that brought about the Romantic movement.
Beginning with Eliot, “the Grand Old Man of the Moment whose pronouncements are almost ex-ca-(Continued on Page 4)
igma Chi lauds SC chancellor
Named as the most distinguished alumnus of the year by the national Sigma Chi fraternity, Chancellor Rufus B. von KleinSmid yesterday received the annual scroll and medal of the fraternity in acknowledgment of the honor.
The award was made at the fraternity’s recent convention in Columhus, Ohio, when Chancellor von KleinSmid addressed the gathering. Signed by John Neal Campbell, grand consul, and Sam C. Bullock, executive director, the citation reads:
“Because you have a matchless record as an educator and administrator and hold a scorc of honorary degrees and scholastic distinctions. Because you have been cited for your work in behalf of good relations between the Americas and between the United States and other nations. And because you are Chancellor of the University of Southern California and gained international renown as an educator during your 26 years as president of that university, Sigma Chi Fraternity takes pleasure in awarding a significant Sig medal.”
Chancellor von KleinSmid was an active member of the fraternity’s Beta Phi chapter in 1904, when he served as president of the University of Arizona.
WOIP GAL ... no engrams. she (p. 2 letters)
Carmel’s sweet
So try the car pool
Carmel Montgomery, the little lady at the desk in the student lounge, promises she can help anyone looking for a ride to New York, Chicago, Seattle, or almost anywhere north of the Belgian Oongo.
She tells us she has people with automobiles, and people without them, and she intends to get them together.
Never mind the Flying Afghanistan! or the Tibetan Tigers, Carmel insists. Just see her.
Magic wand, she claims.
Why not trot up and find out?
Te Ata billed at SC
Chickasaw maid plans recital Tuesday night
Native legends, myths, chants, and rituals out of the rich historic past of the American Indian will be performed at 3:30 Tuesday evening on thestagreof Hancock auditorium.
Te Ata, outstanding American Indian dramatist and singer of thc Chickasaw tribe, will give a free iecture-recital in which she will interpret the little-known folklore of her race.
She will appear in native costume as she demonstrates and describes her native folkways and tribal rites while accompanying herself with rattles and ceremonial drums.
Miss Te Ata's name in Chickasaw language means literally “Bearer of the Morning.”
She was educated al the Oklahoma College for Women and at the Theater school of Carnegie tech, after which she performed in such places as Carnegie hall and Stratford-cn-Avon.
Naturalist Ernest Thompson Seton says of the Indian artist, “At last the Red race has found its voice.”
Ah, nature study
NO. 15
Friday, Aug. 18, 1950
Educ. panel to air vexing PE problems
Members of the last of the Summer Session education anel series will attempt to simplify the administrative vexations brought on by physical education programs.
They will meet for the informal discussion Monday afternoon at 3:15 in Hancock auditrium. The audience will be
——--—-—— ¥lree to question panel members,
_____ and introduce new questions.
MDs., pet lovers fight for title to unwanted dogs
still
Kid control
Kenney gets nod to SC law office
John P. Kenney, consultant on Juvenile control for the California j Youth authority, has been appointed coordinator of the Civic Center law enforcement program for the U3C School of Public Administration. His assignment will begin with the opening of the fall semesetr on ^ept. 18.
A graduate of the University of balifornia, Kenney was made di-■ctor of ln-servioe training for ne Berkeley Police department in 944 He has served with the Cali-ornia Youth authority since 1047.
Kenney has done a series of pecial studies on police adminis-ration and juvenile delinquency revention in numerous California ities and also has served as a eader in state-wide conferences of gencies in the field.
In his new position as coordinator f the SC law enforcement program t the downtown Civic Center head-uarters, Ker.ney will deal with robation and parole administra-on, corrective problems, and agen-training needs.
The antivisection battle is raging as furiously as ever.
Reports that an antivivisectionist injunction was being considered which would prevent release bf unclaimed pound animals to approved research organizations as provided by a city council ordinance sparked the latest outcries from research scientists.
INJUNCTION A BETRAYAL “Such an injunction would be a betrayal of the American boys who are fighting and dying for our nation today,” said Dr. Clinton H. Thienes, secretary of the Medical Research Association of California.
“Let the antivivisectionist organizations and individuals wrho are backing an injunction against this ordinance which was passed to assure the safety and fill the needs of our fighting men bear this betrayal upon their own conscience,” he said.
The Atomic Energy commission, Admiral Nimitz, and Rear Admiral H. L. Pugh, deputy surgeon general of the Navy, have wired the city council pleading that impounded unwanted animals be released, said Dr. Thienes.
ATOMICIST WARNS Dr. T. J. Haley, chief of the pathology section of the atomic energy project at UCLA stated that: “Research work necessary to the protection <of civilians and soldiers against atomic energy radiation cannot proceed unless some of the unwanted and presently destroyed dogs in the public pounds can be saved for our studies."
Professor John W. Fredericks, moderator for the day, anticipates great interest in the problem of extra pay for coaches who must work after school hours. Additional pay has been a sore point in local schools, he says.
SPORTS PROBLEMS Another ticklish subject is interscholastic sports for girls. Many Eastern school systems allow girl students to compete with girls from other schools, but the idea has met strong opposition on the West Coast, according to Professor Fredericks.
Professor William L. Hughes, director of health and physical education at Temple university, wili lead discussion on coaches’ extrahours pay.
HEALTH PROBLEMS Health provisions and training of instructors will be considered by Frank R. Williams, director, division of health education, Arizona State department of health.
Professor Aileene Lockhart will tell of the problems encountered in girls’ interscholastic sports competition.
. . . illustrating the rigors of last year's Trajan Chest drive which financed Troy Camp are Lee Jones assisted by the Beverlys Badham and Heiss.
Underprivileged kids get Troy Camp trip
SC grad receives Guam assignment
Robert Lawrence, graduate student in the School of Public Administration, has been made an administrative assistant in the office of Gov. Carlton Skinner of Guam.
Lawrence will leave soon to aid in the establishment of self-gov-einment for the island. He will be accompanied by his wife Marjory Sargent I»awrence who is a lecturer in public administration at SC.
The joys of mountain camping will be experienced for the first time by 210 teen-age boys and girls from the east side of Los Angeles this month as guests of tlie SC student body.
Funds from the Trojan Chest drive are providing the 10-day vacations for the children.
Traveling to Troy camp in three groups of 70 each, the teen-agers will be supervised by 35 campus student-counselors under the direction of Jordan Sutherland of Kappa. Alpha fraternity.
The first unit, a girl’s group, is camping at Jerks lake in the San Bernardino mountains. This unit is
being supervised by SC coeds Helen Harker and Sharon Endsley with the assistance of volunteer counselors from the campus.
Troy camp's second unit, a boys group, leaves for camp today with the third group following at the end of the month. The boys are members of the Variety Boys club with E. L. McKenzie serving ai executive director.
A program of nature studies, handcraft work, boating, and sport*
: has been set up for the campers. Students of the cinema department will record camp activities on color I sound-film.

Dianetic converts scoff at skeptics
English critic eulogizes t. s. eliot
.... by ALICE KATEM
After speaking about modern ritish poets for more than an hour yesterday, Geoffrey Moore, English writer and editor, told his audience. “Now if anyone asks me when the good people are going to take over England I’ll get so furious and frantic that I'll hire a hall like L. Ron Hubbard.”
Professor Moore, who is a graduate of London and Cambridge universities and the Sorbonne, ran the gamut of present-day poets from T. S. Eliot through John Masefield and the Georgians, to the Pylon poets including W. H. luden, Stephen Spender, and Louis MacNeice of the BBC, in his dis-
cussion of the New Romantic movement.
NEW ROMANTICS
“If anything comes of the work from this period, I think it will be from this group of New Romantics including Dylon Thomas, of the voice of ‘a sea of treacle moving to the beat of a gong;’ George Barker, W. S. Graham, who writes very fine and very incomprehensible lyrics, and Cecil Day-Lewis, next in line for the Poet Laureateship,” he said.
PUBLIC MUST LEARN Professor Moore explained why to many people think 20th century poetry is obscure. He said that the modern poet no longer tries to ad-
dress his audience orally but rather visibly in what he terms as "mind-music.”
He said that the public must learn to accept a new kind of ca-dence and live with the poetry in order to understand it, as they must with the music of Schoenberg, Hindemith, and Bloch.
Reading many poems, both comprehensible and incomprehensible, Professor Moore traced the significant influences that brought about the Romantic movement.
Beginning with Eliot, “the Grand Old Man of the Moment whose pronouncements are almost ex-ca-(Continued on Page 4)
igma Chi lauds SC chancellor
Named as the most distinguished alumnus of the year by the national Sigma Chi fraternity, Chancellor Rufus B. von KleinSmid yesterday received the annual scroll and medal of the fraternity in acknowledgment of the honor.
The award was made at the fraternity’s recent convention in Columhus, Ohio, when Chancellor von KleinSmid addressed the gathering. Signed by John Neal Campbell, grand consul, and Sam C. Bullock, executive director, the citation reads:
“Because you have a matchless record as an educator and administrator and hold a scorc of honorary degrees and scholastic distinctions. Because you have been cited for your work in behalf of good relations between the Americas and between the United States and other nations. And because you are Chancellor of the University of Southern California and gained international renown as an educator during your 26 years as president of that university, Sigma Chi Fraternity takes pleasure in awarding a significant Sig medal.”
Chancellor von KleinSmid was an active member of the fraternity’s Beta Phi chapter in 1904, when he served as president of the University of Arizona.
WOIP GAL ... no engrams. she (p. 2 letters)
Carmel’s sweet
So try the car pool
Carmel Montgomery, the little lady at the desk in the student lounge, promises she can help anyone looking for a ride to New York, Chicago, Seattle, or almost anywhere north of the Belgian Oongo.
She tells us she has people with automobiles, and people without them, and she intends to get them together.
Never mind the Flying Afghanistan! or the Tibetan Tigers, Carmel insists. Just see her.
Magic wand, she claims.
Why not trot up and find out?
Te Ata billed at SC
Chickasaw maid plans recital Tuesday night
Native legends, myths, chants, and rituals out of the rich historic past of the American Indian will be performed at 3:30 Tuesday evening on thestagreof Hancock auditorium.
Te Ata, outstanding American Indian dramatist and singer of thc Chickasaw tribe, will give a free iecture-recital in which she will interpret the little-known folklore of her race.
She will appear in native costume as she demonstrates and describes her native folkways and tribal rites while accompanying herself with rattles and ceremonial drums.
Miss Te Ata's name in Chickasaw language means literally “Bearer of the Morning.”
She was educated al the Oklahoma College for Women and at the Theater school of Carnegie tech, after which she performed in such places as Carnegie hall and Stratford-cn-Avon.
Naturalist Ernest Thompson Seton says of the Indian artist, “At last the Red race has found its voice.”
Ah, nature study
NO. 15
Friday, Aug. 18, 1950
Educ. panel to air vexing PE problems
Members of the last of the Summer Session education anel series will attempt to simplify the administrative vexations brought on by physical education programs.
They will meet for the informal discussion Monday afternoon at 3:15 in Hancock auditrium. The audience will be
——--—-—— ¥lree to question panel members,
_____ and introduce new questions.
MDs., pet lovers fight for title to unwanted dogs
still
Kid control
Kenney gets nod to SC law office
John P. Kenney, consultant on Juvenile control for the California j Youth authority, has been appointed coordinator of the Civic Center law enforcement program for the U3C School of Public Administration. His assignment will begin with the opening of the fall semesetr on ^ept. 18.
A graduate of the University of balifornia, Kenney was made di-■ctor of ln-servioe training for ne Berkeley Police department in 944 He has served with the Cali-ornia Youth authority since 1047.
Kenney has done a series of pecial studies on police adminis-ration and juvenile delinquency revention in numerous California ities and also has served as a eader in state-wide conferences of gencies in the field.
In his new position as coordinator f the SC law enforcement program t the downtown Civic Center head-uarters, Ker.ney will deal with robation and parole administra-on, corrective problems, and agen-training needs.
The antivisection battle is raging as furiously as ever.
Reports that an antivivisectionist injunction was being considered which would prevent release bf unclaimed pound animals to approved research organizations as provided by a city council ordinance sparked the latest outcries from research scientists.
INJUNCTION A BETRAYAL “Such an injunction would be a betrayal of the American boys who are fighting and dying for our nation today,” said Dr. Clinton H. Thienes, secretary of the Medical Research Association of California.
“Let the antivivisectionist organizations and individuals wrho are backing an injunction against this ordinance which was passed to assure the safety and fill the needs of our fighting men bear this betrayal upon their own conscience,” he said.
The Atomic Energy commission, Admiral Nimitz, and Rear Admiral H. L. Pugh, deputy surgeon general of the Navy, have wired the city council pleading that impounded unwanted animals be released, said Dr. Thienes.
ATOMICIST WARNS Dr. T. J. Haley, chief of the pathology section of the atomic energy project at UCLA stated that: “Research work necessary to the protection